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Matched-accent processing: Bulgarian-English bilinguals do not have a processing advantage with Bulgarian-accented English over native English speech
Lickley, Robin; Dokovova, Marie; Scobbie, James M.. - : Open Library of Humanities, 2022
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Matched-accent processing : Bulgarian-English bilinguals do not have a processing advantage with Bulgarian-accented English over native English speech
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Coarticulation across morpheme boundaries: An ultrasound study of past-tense inflection in Scottish English
Abstract: James M. Scobbie - orcid:0000-0003-4509-6782 orcid:0000-0003-4509-6782 ; It has been hypothesized that morphologically-complex words are mentally stored in a decomposed form, often requiring online composition during processing. Morphologically-simple words can only be stored as a whole. The way a word is stored and retrieved is thought to influence its realization during speech production, so that when retrieval requires less time, the articulatory plan is executed faster. Faster articulatory execution could result in more coarticulation. Accordingly, we hypothesized that morphologically-simple words might be produced with more coarticulation than apparently homophonous morphologically-complex words, because the retrieval of monomorphemic forms is direct, in contrast to morphologically-complex ones, which might need to be composed online into full word forms. Using Ultrasound Tongue Imaging, we tested this hypothesis with nine speakers of Scottish English. Over two days of training, participants learned phonemically identical monomorphemic and morphologically-complex nonce words, while on the third consecutive testing day, they produced them in two prosodic contexts. Two types of articulatory analyses revealed no systematic differences in coarticulation between monomorphemic and morphologically-complex items, yet a few speakers did idiosyncratically produce some morphological effects on articulation. Our work contributes to our understanding of how morphologically complex words are stored and processed during speech production. ; https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wocn.2021.101101 ; 88 ; pub ; pub
Keyword: Coarticulation; Morphology; Speech Production; Ultrasound Tongue Imaging
URL: https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/20.500.12289/11496/11496.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12289/11496/11496.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12289/11496
https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/11496
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wocn.2021.101101
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Quantifying changes in ultrasound tongue-shape pre- and post-intervention in speakers with submucous cleft palate: An illustrative case study
Wood, Sara; Scobbie, James M.; Roxburgh, Zoe. - : Taylor & Francis, 2021
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The dorsal differentiation of velar from alveolar stops in typically developing children and children with persistent velar fronting
Cleland, Joanne; Scobbie, James M.. - : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, 2021
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The dorsal differentiation of velar from alveolar stops in typically developing children and children with persistent velar fronting
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Quantifying changes in ultrasound tongue-shape pre- and post-intervention in speakers with submucous cleft palate : an illustrative case study
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8
Gestural delay and gestural reduction. Articulatory variation in /l/-vocalisation in Southern British English
Strycharczuk, Patrycja; Scobbie, James M.. - : Edinburgh University Press, 2020
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The effects of syllable and utterance position on tongue shape and gestural magnitude in /l/ and /r
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10
The Effects of Syllable and Utterance Position on Tongue Shape and Gestural Magnitude in /l/ and /r/
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11
Say again? Individual articulatory strategies for producing a clearly-spoken minimal pair wordlist
Ma, Joan K-Y; Scobbie, James M.. - : International Phonetic Association, 2019
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12
Say again? Individual acoustic strategies for producing a clearly-spoken minimal pair wordlist
Ma, Joan K-Y; Scobbie, James M.. - : International Phonetic Association, 2019
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13
Enabling New Articulatory Gestures in Children With Persistent Speech Sound Disorders Using Ultrasound Visual Biofeedback
In: pissn: 1092-4388 ; eissn: 1558-9102 (2019)
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14
The effects of syllable and utterance position on tongue shape and gestural magnitude in /l/ and /r/
Leplatre, Gregory; Stuart-Smith, Jane; Lawson, Eleanor. - : International Phonetic Association, 2019
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15
Acquisition of new speech motor plans via articulatory visual biofeedback
Scobbie, James M.; Cleland, Joanne. - : Peter Lang, 2019
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16
Enabling New Articulatory Gestures in Children With Persistent Speech Sound Disorders Using Ultrasound Visual Biofeedback
In: pissn: 1092-4388 ; eissn: 1558-9102 (2019)
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17
Bulgarian vowel reduction in unstressed position: An ultrasound and acoustic investigation
Dokovova, Marie; Sabev, Mitko; Scobbie, James M.. - : International Phonetic Association, 2019
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18
Enabling New Articulatory Gestures in Children With Persistent Speech Sound Disorders Using Ultrasound Visual Biofeedback
In: pissn: 1092-4388 ; eissn: 1558-9102 (2019)
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19
Enabling New Articulatory Gestures in Children With Persistent Speech Sound Disorders Using Ultrasound Visual Biofeedback
In: pissn: 1092-4388 ; eissn: 1558-9102 (2019)
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20
Enabling new articulatory gestures in children with persistent speech sound disorders using ultrasound visual biofeedback
Cleland, Joanne; Scobbie, James M.; Roxburgh, Zoe. - : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA), 2019
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